This is what I have programmed.
NIFC ELT 121.500000 AM
NIFC Air 3 122.850000 AM
NIFC All Com 122.900000 AM
NIFC Air 1 122.925000 AM
NIFC Air 2 122.975000 AM
NIFC Air 4 123.025000 AM
NIFC Air 5 123.025000 AM
NIFC Air 7 123.050000 AM
NIFC Air 6 123.075000 AM
CDF B Victor 123.975000 AM
CDF AAB S3 133.425000 AM
USFS R5 LE T 162.962500 CT
NIFC IntraCrew 1 163.712500 FM
BDF4 ServRpt R 164.125000 CT 156.7
BDF3 AdmRpt T 164.137500 CT
CNF Frst Rpt T 164.800000 CT
BDF4 ServRpt T 164.825000 CT 156.7
NIFC IntraCrew 2 167.137500 FM
NIFC T1 R 168.050000 FM
BDF2 FrstRpt T 168.150000 CT
NIFC T2 168.200000 FM
NIFC T3 168.600000 FM
BDF5 R5 Prjct R 168.662500 FM
A/G 59 CA4 P R 169.112500 FM
I'm confused as to what T and R mean. I thought it meant tactical and repeater, but on USFS R5 LE, BDF4 ServRpt, BDF3 AdmRpt, CNF Frst Rpt and BDF FrstRpt you show as T and on a known tactical, NIFC Tac 1 you show an R. If simplex comms (tactical) are carried out on forest, admin and service nets, the repeater output frequency is used. I'm curious why you show only repeater inputs and not outputs for all the repeater nets.
The 2020 R5 Freq Guide does not list a Service Net for the San Bernardino NF, however, in their radio group/channel plan for the forest, it might be included in some groups as channel 4. I don't have a current copy of their group plan. This is the same service net used on the Angeles and now I wonder if it is used on the Cleveland, as used to be the case with an older Service Net freq pair.
I think the IntraCrew frequencies are narrowband FM or NFM. Nationally each interagency hotshot crew has been assigned one of the 4 "IntraCrew Frequencies," which are actually federal government itinerant frequencies assigned at the time of the NTIA narrowband mandate in 2005. Each crew has been assigned a CTCSS for their assigned frequency. Remember that these are for logistical communications within a crew, not for tactical comms within a crew or to communicate with other crews, that occurs on incident assigned tacticals.
The ELT, (electronic location transmitter?) frequency is universal and international. It's official name is International Air Distress (IAD). It is not NIFC assigned.
The frequency you show as "R5 LE T" is the repeater input for 171.7875, the law enforcement net Region 5 of the USFS is currently building. The effort is going slowly. It will be encrypted eventually, per national, all federal agency, direction for law enforcement comms.
The ICS Form 205, the Incident Radio Communications Plan, posted by 952Media, is gold for all incidents. The ICS 220, the Air Operations Summary shows all the aviation freq use. Each handheld is cloned with the plan so that everyone can switch to a channel and be on the same frequency. There might be some communications on the local, day to day nets and tacs, as a result of this incident, but not directly related to its management. You might hear recreation people talking about campground closures on Forest and Admin required because of the fire and similar.